House Speaker Nancy Pelosi took aim at the progressive rhetoric around policing Sunday, reiterating that a call to defund the police, a stance seeking a reduction in law enforcement budgets, is “dead” and “not the position of the Democratic Party.”
It’s a sign of the divergent views among Democrats regarding how policing should be conducted going forward, after Democrats prioritized police reform in the run-up to the 2020 election. Pelosi made the remarks to ABC’s George Stephanopoulos in response to a question about Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., who last week rebutted calls from fellow Democrats telling her she should stop using the phrase.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says “defund the police” is “not the position of the Democratic Party" as lawmakers remains split over how to address crime.
— ABC News (@ABC) February 14, 2022
“Community safety, to protect and defend in every way, is our oath of office.” https://t.co/0vEKwQoJ7e pic.twitter.com/uvtFi6mAn7
“Community safety — to protect and defend in every way — is our oath of office,” Pelosi said, adding: “We’re all concerned about mistreatment of people.”
Though she said House Democrats hope to pass a bill that includes restrictions on no-knock warrants or chokeholds (“some of those issues, even if we can’t get it all done”), she insisted the push to defund the police is “dead.”
Those remarks are unlikely to deter activists and lawmakers who have been resolute about curbing large police budgets. Moreover, it behooves Democrats like Pelosi to speak more soberly about the inability to pass a sweeping police reform bill, rather than critique attempts to do so. When the speaker makes a passing reference to a world in which Democrats “can’t get it all done” with regard to police reform, she’s referring to a world that will continue to tacitly endorse at least some measure of police violence.
And we know how fatal that violence can be.








